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CNET Editors' Rating

The GoodStrong call quality, straightforward navigation, and features like Bluetooth, video recording, and an FM radio take the affordable Nokia 2720 Fold beyond the basics.

The BadThe Nokia 2720 Fold has a smudge-prone surface and the phone tips backward when you set it down. It has a 2.5mm headset jack and a weak music player.

The Bottom LineDespite some drawbacks in design, more-advanced features like video recording and an FM radio make the midgrade Nokia 2720 Fold better than average for those looking to augment basic services.

Review Sections

Editors' note: The Nokia 2720 Fold is available unlocked and for AT&T service. We reviewed the T-Mobile version, but all models will be similar.

It's tough to beat $20 for a camera phone, and as far as looks go, the Nokia 2720 Fold isn't half bad. You arguably get more than you pay for with this glossy, though smudge-prone, flip handset. A music player, video recording, and Bluetooth take you beyond the basics, the controls are large, and the performance is decent. All that and a killer price make the Fold a contender for a simple phone. Nokia's Fold comes in black and deep red on T-Mobile's service ($19.99 with two-year contract) and dark blue on AT&T ($9.99 with two-year contract.)

Design
Glossy and mirrored, the shiny Nokia 2720 Fold cuts a handsome figure coming out of the box. But hold this handset up to the light and you'll notice you've already besmirched its plastic coat with an endless number of smudges. Though sharply angled at its top, the Fold gentles into rounded corners at its bottom edge. At 3.66 inches tall, 1.81 inches wide, and 0.78 inch deep and 3.18 ounces, the Fold is light yet sturdy in our hands, with a thick hinge. The Fold flips up easily enough, and those with larger thumbs shouldn't have complaints.

The 1.36-inch black-and-white external display shows the time and caller ID (but not a photo--boo), and tells you when the keypad is locked. You can't adjust the backlight time, which is too bad, but squeezing the volume rocker will flash the clock. On the Fold's right spine are the volume rocker and a proprietary Nokia charger port. On the left spine, you'll find a 2.5mm headphone jack. Since the Fold has a music player, it's shame that this isn't a standard 3.5mm jack.

On the back, the Fold's 1.3-megapixel camera angles slightly upward. Fortunately, you can rest your finger below the lip to apply extra stabilizing control. The phone lacks a camera flash and a mirror for self portraits, but its shiny surface is enough for vanity shots.

The Fold opens to a 1.8-inch screen with 128x160-pixel resolution and 65,000 colors. You can adjust font size, but not the brightness or backlighting time. Below is a four-way navigation toggle and central OK button. Nokia uses a similar toggle square on other phones, including the Nokia 2320 GoPhone, but we found it occasionally clumsy. The laggy response on the screen's interface didn't earn any points in our books, either. The backlit keys on the dial pad are large and flush, but texting and dialing worked fine. The Fold's two keypad shortcuts trigger the music player and the phone's silent mode, and you can map more keys to more shortcuts in the Settings menu. Activating the camera isn't hard from the menu, but we'd much prefer a dedicated key on the dial pad or spine.

Set it down and you'll see that the top-heavy Fold rocks back on its head instead of remaining on its base. The imbalance makes the Fold hard to operate from a tabletop.

Features
You can squeeze 500 contacts into the address book, with room in each entry for five phone numbers and an e-mail address. Groups are supported, and you can pair a contact with a photo. Just keep in mind that photo ID won't appear on the external display. Unfortunately, the Fold's 16 preinstalled polyphonic tones and eight alerts don't pair with a contact, but they will with a group. When silence is golden, vibrate or silent mode can sub in for ringtones.

Jessica Dolcourt reviews smartphones and cell phones, covers handset news, and pens the monthly column Smartphones Unlocked. A senior editor, she started at CNET in 2006 and spent four years reviewing mobile and desktop software before taking on devices.
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